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advanced_notions:symmetry_breaking:higgs_mechanism [2018/03/29 17:04]
jakobadmin [Abstract]
advanced_notions:symmetry_breaking:higgs_mechanism [2018/05/15 06:58]
jakobadmin ↷ Links adapted because of a move operation
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 <tabbox Intuitive> ​ <tabbox Intuitive> ​
-  * For an intuitive explanation of the Higgs mechanism, see [[http://​jakobschwichtenberg.com/​higgs-intuitively/​|Understanding the Higgs mechanism intuitively]] by J. Schwichtenberg+
  
 <​blockquote>​ <​blockquote>​
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 ---- ----
  
 +  * For an intuitive explanation of the Higgs mechanism, see [[http://​jakobschwichtenberg.com/​higgs-intuitively/​|Understanding the Higgs mechanism intuitively]] by J. Schwichtenberg
   * See also, the most famous PopSci explanation of the Higgs mechanism: https://​www.hep.ucl.ac.uk/​~djm/​higgsa.html   * See also, the most famous PopSci explanation of the Higgs mechanism: https://​www.hep.ucl.ac.uk/​~djm/​higgsa.html
   * Another great explanation can be found on page 163 in "A Zeptospace Odyssey"​ by Guidice   * Another great explanation can be found on page 163 in "A Zeptospace Odyssey"​ by Guidice
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 * Another great summary can be found in https://​arxiv.org/​pdf/​1405.5532.pdf * Another great summary can be found in https://​arxiv.org/​pdf/​1405.5532.pdf
 <tabbox Why is it interesting?> ​ <tabbox Why is it interesting?> ​
-The Higgs mechanism is a crucial ingredient of the [[models:​standard_model|standard model of particle physics]]. Without the Higgs mechanism, all particles are not allowed to have a mass, because such terms would violate the [[advanced_tools:​gauge_symmetry|gauge symmetry]]. (Breaking of [[advanced_tools:​gauge_symmetry|gauge symmetry]] is a bad thing, because the [[advanced_tools:​renormalization|renormalizability]],​ i.e. the removing of the infinities that pop-up in most [[theories:​quantum_field_theory|quantum field theory]] calculations,​ depends on the existence of gauge symmetry.) ​+The Higgs mechanism is a crucial ingredient of the [[models:​standard_model|standard model of particle physics]]. Without the Higgs mechanism, all particles are not allowed to have a mass, because such terms would violate the [[advanced_tools:​gauge_symmetry|gauge symmetry]]. (Breaking of [[advanced_tools:​gauge_symmetry|gauge symmetry]] is a bad thing, because the [[advanced_tools:​renormalization|renormalizability]],​ i.e. the removing of the infinities that pop-up in most [[theories:​quantum_field_theory:canonical|quantum field theory]] calculations,​ depends on the existence of gauge symmetry.) ​
  
 However, we know from experiments that some [[advanced_notions:​elementary_particles|elementary particles]],​ like the electron or also the W-bosons that mediate weak interactions,​ are massive. These masses can be explained thanks to the Higgs mechanism. The masses then arise as a result of the coupling of the massive particles to the Higgs field and this is possible without breaking gauge symmetry. ​ However, we know from experiments that some [[advanced_notions:​elementary_particles|elementary particles]],​ like the electron or also the W-bosons that mediate weak interactions,​ are massive. These masses can be explained thanks to the Higgs mechanism. The masses then arise as a result of the coupling of the massive particles to the Higgs field and this is possible without breaking gauge symmetry. ​
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 </​blockquote>​ </​blockquote>​
  
 +<​blockquote>​
 +It is well known that gauge symmetries do not actually get broken, but rather become concealed in what is called—in an abuse of language—the “broken phase” of a theory [28–31].
 +
 +<​cite>​https://​arxiv.org/​pdf/​1703.02964.pdf</​cite>​
 +</​blockquote>​
 +
 +<​blockquote>​Symmetry breaking in QFT results from a mismatch between
 +variational symmetries of the Lagrangian and symmetries that can be
 +implemented as unitary transformations on the Hilbert space of states.
 +(The inapt adjective ‘spontaneous’ differentiates symmetry breaking that
 +arises due to the noninvariance of the vacuum state from that due to
 +explicitly adding asymmetric terms to the Lagrangian.) [...]
 +Fabri and Picasso
 +(1966) showed that if the vacuum state $|0\rangle$ is translationally invariant,
 +then the vacuum is either invariant under the internal symmetry, $Q |0\rangle = 0$
 +, or there is no state corresponding to $Q |0\rangle$ in the Hilbert space. ​
 +The second case corresponds to SSB. The symmetry is hidden in that
 +there is no unitary operator to map a physical state to its symmetric
 +counterparts;​ instead, the symmetry is (roughly speaking) a map from
 +one Hilbert space of states to an entirely distinct space. This is usually
 +described as ‘vacuum degeneracy’,​ although each distinct Hilbert space
 +has a unique vacuum state. [...]
 +Parenti, Strocchi, and Velo (1977) study the features of SSB in classical,
 +nonlinear field theories; in these theories, solutions to the equations of
 +motion fall into distinct “sectors,​” corresponding to **global field configurations
 +that cannot be transformed into each other via local perturbations**. The variational symmetries of the Lagrangian then fall into the unbroken
 +symmetries, for which $Q_V$ converges in the limit, and broken symmetries,
 +for which $Q_V$ fails to converge. The broken symmetries map between the
 +“physically disjoint worlds” represented by the distinct global field configurations.
 +Similarly, in QFT, the degenerate vacua correspond to distinct
 +global field configurations with minimum energy, with Hilbert spaces built
 +up from a particular vacuum state. ​
 +
 +
 +<​cite>​http://​publish.uwo.ca/​~csmeenk2/​files/​HiggsMechanism.pdf</​cite></​blockquote>​
  
 ---- ----
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 +-->Can the Higgs interactions be considered a fifth fundamental force? # 
 +Yes! See https://​physics.stackexchange.com/​questions/​1080/​why-isnt-higgs-coupling-considered-a-fifth-fundamental-force and also [[http://​inspirehep.net/​record/​256768/​files/​Pages_from_C87-01-24_1-18.pdf|THE FIFTH FORCE]] by James D. Bjorken 
 +<--
  
 --> Is there an "​inverse"​ Higgs mechanism?# --> Is there an "​inverse"​ Higgs mechanism?#
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 It is well known that breaking of a local gauge symmetry is impossible (see the quotes below.) It is well known that breaking of a local gauge symmetry is impossible (see the quotes below.)
-However, there is symmetry breaking when the Higgs field acquires a non-zero vev. It is a global part of the gauge group that gets broken. However, there are no [[advanced_notions:​symmetry_breaking:​goldstones_theorem|Goldstone bosons]], because these correspond to the gauge degrees of freedom and become the longitudinal polarizations of the gauge bosons that become massive. ​+However, there is symmetry breaking when the Higgs field acquires a non-zero vev. It is a global part of the gauge group that gets broken. However, there are no [[theorems:​goldstones_theorem|Goldstone bosons]], because these correspond to the gauge degrees of freedom and become the longitudinal polarizations of the gauge bosons that become massive. ​
  
 This is discussed nicely in "​Quantum Field Theory - A Modern Perspective"​ by V. P. Nair at page 268: This is discussed nicely in "​Quantum Field Theory - A Modern Perspective"​ by V. P. Nair at page 268:
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 <​cite>​[[https://​arxiv.org/​abs/​cond-mat/​0503400|Is electromagnetic gauge invariance spontaneously violated in superconductors?​]] by Martin Greiter</​cite></​blockquote>​ <​cite>​[[https://​arxiv.org/​abs/​cond-mat/​0503400|Is electromagnetic gauge invariance spontaneously violated in superconductors?​]] by Martin Greiter</​cite></​blockquote>​
  
-The fact that spontaneous breaking of a local symmetry is impossible is the message of [[advanced_notions:​elitzur_s_theorem]]. For a gauge symmetry, we have a copy of the symmetry group $G$ at each spacetime point. Thus symmetry breaking would need to happen at each spacetime point individual, i.e. in each zero-dimensional subsystem. A spacetime point is zero-dimensional and there is no symmetry breaking in systems of dimension lower than 2. This is known as the [[advanced_notions:​symmetry_breaking:​mermin-wagner_theorem|Mermin-Wagner theorem]]. ​+The fact that spontaneous breaking of a local symmetry is impossible is the message of [[theorems:​elitzur_s_theorem]]. For a gauge symmetry, we have a copy of the symmetry group $G$ at each spacetime point. Thus symmetry breaking would need to happen at each spacetime point individual, i.e. in each zero-dimensional subsystem. A spacetime point is zero-dimensional and there is no symmetry breaking in systems of dimension lower than 2. This is known as the [[advanced_notions:​symmetry_breaking:​mermin-wagner_theorem|Mermin-Wagner theorem]]. ​
  
 <​blockquote>​ <​blockquote>​
-However, strictly speaking a //local gauge// symmetry can //never// be broken because we would want and observable to serve as an order parameter, but all such are necessarily gauge-invariant;​ this is the content of //[[advanced_notions:​elitzur_s_theorem]]//​.+However, strictly speaking a //local gauge// symmetry can //never// be broken because we would want and observable to serve as an order parameter, but all such are necessarily gauge-invariant;​ this is the content of //[[theorems:​elitzur_s_theorem]]//​.
  
 <​cite>​[[https://​books.google.de/​books?​id=LtdqCQAAQBAJ&​lpg=PA30&​ots=xKAr3CFF-b&​dq=banks%20finite%20temperature%20behaviour%20of%20the%20lattice&​hl=de&​pg=PA9#​v=onepage&​q&​f=false|Classification of topological defects and their relevance to cosmology and elsewhere]] by T.W.B. Kibble</​cite>​ <​cite>​[[https://​books.google.de/​books?​id=LtdqCQAAQBAJ&​lpg=PA30&​ots=xKAr3CFF-b&​dq=banks%20finite%20temperature%20behaviour%20of%20the%20lattice&​hl=de&​pg=PA9#​v=onepage&​q&​f=false|Classification of topological defects and their relevance to cosmology and elsewhere]] by T.W.B. Kibble</​cite>​
advanced_notions/symmetry_breaking/higgs_mechanism.txt · Last modified: 2018/12/17 13:56 by jakobadmin